0 to move easily without stopping and without effort or noise: --
1 to fly by floating on air currents instead of using power from wings or an engine: --
Unlike other spacecraft, the shuttle can glide back through the atmosphere, land safely, and be reused.
2 a long, easy, smooth movement across a surface that makes no noise: --
3 the action of floating on air currents, rather than using power from wings or an engine: --
4 a sound that is similar to a vowel but marks the start of a syllable: --
5 to move easily and continuously, as if without effort: --
She glided along on her skates.
The segments transcribed as \h\ and \hy\ are classified as fricatives rather than laryngeal glides ; they pattern with fricatives in the manifestation of nasal harmony.
The emergence of the nasal contours and nasalised glides in this language are therefore not indicative of nasal spreading.
The structural description of gliding would be satisfied and would apply to yield [w*n].
No language distinguishes vowels or glides in terms of this feature.
The fundamental difference between a red cell gliding on the endothelial glycocalyx and the human skiing on fresh powder is schematically shown in figure 11.
Microneme proteins are released very early in the invasion process, facilitating host-cell binding and gliding motility.
Regarding manner of articulation there are stops, fricatives, affricates, nasals, liquids, and glides.
The stimuli were frequency glides, that is, tones that changed in frequency in either an upward or downward direction.